LAS VEGAS — Warner Bros. Pictures brought out the big names for its CinemaCon presentation Tuesday, from stars like Sandra Bullock to movies like “Wonder Woman 2,” but it was Bradley Cooper’s “A Star is Born” that stole the show.
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Updated: April 12, 2026 @ 4:40 am
LAS VEGAS — Warner Bros. Pictures brought out the big names for its CinemaCon presentation Tuesday, from stars like Sandra Bullock to movies like “Wonder Woman 2,” but it was Bradley Cooper’s “A Star is Born” that stole the show.
Cooper showed the emotional first trailer for the film to conference attendees in Las Vegas to some hearty, and rare, applause from the crowd of theater owners and exhibitors.
It’s the directorial debut for Cooper, who also stars in the film alongside Lady Gaga, who plays the aspiring singer. This marks the third remake of “A Star is Born,” which has classic versions with Judy Garland and Barbra Streisand in the role of the inginue Lady Gaga is playing.
“It’s a big swing this movie, I totally get that,” Cooper said. “But you can’t control what moves you. And I always wanted to tell a love story.”
He added that Lady Gaga is “kind of a revelation in this movie.”
The film is three years in the making, and features live-singing on real stages at festivals like Glastonbury and Coachella. It hits theaters on Oct. 5.
Warner Bros. teased a massive slate of films Tuesday, stressing the diversity of their lineup, of “event films, DC tent-poles, animation, first class dramas, elevated horrors and comedies.”
“We love making all times of movies for all types of audiences,” said Warner Bros. Pictures Group chair Toby Emmerich.
Actor Will Arnett moderated the lively presentation, riffing with “Aquaman” star Jason Momoa about whether or not the famously ripped star will “ever do a movie with his shirt on” and other stars like the women of “Ocean’s 8” and the cast of “Crazy Rich Asians.”
The studio showed new, and unfinished footage from James Wan’s “Aquaman” and also teased new details about a few anticipated sequels in video segments featuring “Wonder Woman” director Patty Jenkins, who says the sequel will be set in the 1980s and shows Wonder Woman struggling with the “temptations of our world,” and “It” director Andy Muschietti, who says “Chapter 2” will be scarier and “more intense.”
“So bring your adult diapers to the theater,” Muschietti said.
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Follow AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ldbahr
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